A special bond: Joys,  memories to highlight Bishop   Chartrand High    School reunion
      By John Shaughnessy
      As soon as he saw the police car, Robert Kitchin started to  worry—especially when the ram in the front passenger seat next to Kitchin  raised its head and looked in the direction of the police car.
        Kitchin wondered how he was going to explain to the police  officer that the live ram—named Rambunctious—was a high school mascot, and he  was giving it a ride to a football game.
        Kitchin noticed that the officer returned the ram’s look,  did a double-take and drove away, apparently deciding not to ask any questions.
        In a peculiar way, that moment typifies the brief history of  Bishop Chartrand  High School in Indianapolis from 1962 through 1969. Before  it was merged into Roncalli   High School, Chartrand  was a place where there was rarely a dull moment. It was also a place where the  stories of supporting Catholic education through faith, family and unusual  fundraisers—including selling toothbrushes and even holding a circus—were  common.
        The stories, the joy and the memories of those years will  undoubtedly be recalled when the 1966, ’67, ’68 and ‘69 graduates of  Chartrand—the school’s only four graduating classes—will hold a reunion on Oct.  7 at Roncalli. The reunion will start with a Mass at 5:30 p.m. and include a  dinner at 8 p.m.
  “It was sort of a small school,” recalls Kitchin, the only  principal Chartrand had. “We were trying to give them what the Lord  intended—basically just charity for others. What we couldn’t give them, we made  up with care and devotion to them. They were good kids. You’d tell them what  needed to be done and they’d do it. There were a number of parents interested  in the place, too.”
        Kitchin put an unusual question to some of those parents  when he wanted to find a mascot to represent the school’s nickname, the Rams.
  “I said, ‘Do you know where I can get a sheep ram with big  ram horns?’ ” Kitchin recalls. “One guy said he would go to the stockyards. He  came back with one. Boy, was he filthy. I cleaned him up and put a big dog  harness on him. We put him out where he could graze. We had to teach him to  butt. When he was real good at that, we took him to Beech Grove for a football  game. Everyone left, so I put him in the front seat of the car and started to drive  to Beech Grove.”
        That’s when Kitchin saw the police car and cringed. Still,  it all turned out for the best, which is also how many of the school’s  graduates remember Chartrand.
  “Because Chartrand only existed for four graduating years, I  have always had to explain to people where I went to school,” says Donna Guy  Woodman, a 1966 graduate. “They usually say, ‘Don’t you mean Chatard?’ I have  to explain that we opened our little building in 1962 in the name of Bishop  Joseph Chartrand, not Chatard.”
        Most of Chartrand’s trophies and memorabilia were cast aside  when the school merged into Roncalli, but one major tradition continues in a  slightly altered form—the school’s fight song.
  “A few words in the song have been changed and the catch  phrase of ‘Chartrand Rams’ has been replaced by ‘Roncalli Rebels,’ ” Woodman  says. “We Chartrand graduates still sing the original words softly when we hear  it played at ball games. We are proud of what Roncalli has become in the 40  years since our foundation blocks of the building were set.
  “You can ask any of these graduates from those four  graduating years, and they will agree that we shared a special bond and  friendship that is difficult to explain.”
        Bob Tully saw that special bond as one of the original  teachers and coaches at Chartrand. He has also seen that spirit evolve and grow  as a teacher and a coach at Roncalli ever since it opened.
  “Those Chartrand years were some great experiences,” Tully  says. “They made me fall in love with the south side. Everything about it was  great. Super kids supported by super families. It hasn’t changed since.”
        Bernie Weimer remembers the positive atmosphere that  pervaded the school.
  “We were all young, fresh out of school, and we wanted to do  good,” says Weimer, one of Chartrand’s original teachers and its band director.  “Kitch had a vision of how to get things done and get the funds to make things  go. I walked in there, and Kitch said we needed a band. When we had our first  meeting, 35 kids showed up and 25 played guitar. We had to start from scratch  and order all the equipment. The philosophy was, ‘This is going to happen and  this is what will come.’ ”
        That philosophy led to the creation of a football field from  the dirt that was dug to make the school’s basement. That philosophy also influenced  the unusual fundraisers the school had.
  “Selling toothbrushes is very memorable with all my  classmates,” Woodman says. “I’m sure someone had to have donated them. They  gave us a dozen. My parents said, ‘You’re not going around door to door selling  toothbrushes!’ They bought them all.”
        Kitchin still hasn’t forgotten the circus fundraiser—no  matter how hard he tries.
  “That was a dreadful experience,” he recalls. “I knew a  little girl whose family traveled with the circus. She called up and asked if we  could have the circus at our school. The circus wasn’t too good and they left a  mess, too.”
        Yet, people still remember it as one of the special memories  that made Chartrand distinctive, just like having a live ram for a mascot. 
  “Rambunctious loved to crack people,” Kitchin recalls. “He  tried to give one of the referees a shot. He died finally, but he ate a lot of  archdiocesan shrubbery while we had him.”
        At 84, Kitchin laughs at the memories. He also looks forward  to the reunion.
  “I remember an awful lot of the kids,” he says. “I’ll just  be glad to see how they’re doing. They’re fine kids, and they’ve done well. We  did our best for them. It was fun.”
      (For more information about the reunion, contact Donna Guy  Woodman at 317-787-4770.) †